(Marijuananews note: This is based on the
"Executive Summary." The full report will be out tomorrow.)From The
National Organization for the Reform Of Marijuana Laws www.norml.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 16, 1999
Contacts: Allen St. Pierre; Paul Armentano, (202) 483-8751
Politics, Science Clash In IOM Medical Marijuana Report:
Committee Praises Therapeutic Value Of Marijuana, But Offers
"No Clear Alternative For People Suffering From Chronic Conditions ...
Relieved By Smoking Marijuana"
March 16, 1999: Washington, D.C.: Marijuana constituents, known as cannabinoids, hold
value as medicines to treat a number of serious ailments, but should not be used by most
patients until a non-smoked, rapid onset delivery system becomes available, a National
Academy of Sciences (NAS) Institute of Medicine report concluded.
Allen St. Pierre, Executive Director of The NORML Foundation, dubbed the report a
"political, rather than a scientific" document.
"This report ignores the testimony of hundreds of
patients who gave first hand accounts before the IOM in praise of marijuanas medical
value, and holds marijuana to a higher scientific standard than that applied to other
medications or required by law," he said.
St. Pierre noted that the IOM researchers recommended some
patients engage in the short-term use of smoked marijuana only after their use of all
other conventional medications has failed. The Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act does not
require a drug to demonstrate "superiority" over all existing medicines before
receiving federal approval, and no such hurdle exists for any other drug.
Dr. Lester Grinspoon of Harvard Medical School and a peer
reviewer of the IOM report, called the document a "compromise."
"This report tries to find a middle ground between the political exigencies of an
Administration that wants to deny marijuanas medical value, and the reality that a
growing body of the American public are using it successfully as a medicine," he
said. Grinspoon called the report "tepid" in its support for the use of inhaled
marijuana, and said that researchers diminished the importance of "mountains" of
anecdotal evidence demonstrating marijuanas medical benefit in the treatment of
movement disorders like Multiple Sclerosis and several other serious ailments.
Grinspoon also criticized the report for omitting any discussion
of marijuana vaporizers as an alternative delivery device for cannabinoids.
He said
that such devices already exist and deliver marijuanas therapeutic compounds safely
to human patients while eliminating other unnecessary carcinogenic constituents.
The IOM report, commissioned two years ago by the Office of
National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), follows a 1982 report by the agency that determined,
"Cannabis and its derivatives have shown promise in the treatment of a variety of
disorders, [including] glaucoma, ... asthma, ... and in the nausea and vomiting of cancer
chemotherapy."
The new report praises the medical value of compounds found in marijuana such as THC
and cannabidiol (CBD). "The accumulated data indicate a potential therapeutic value
for cannabinoid drugs, particularly for symptoms such as pain relief, control of nausea
and vomiting, and appetite stimulation," it states. The evidence "suggests that
cannabinoids would be moderately well suited for certain conditions, such as
chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting and AIDS wasting."
However, the report fails to recommend most patients seek medical relief from whole
smoked marijuana, despite its admission that "there are
patients with debilitating symptoms for whom smoked marijuana might provide relief."
Instead, researchers argue that, "There is no clear
alternative for people suffering from chronic conditions that might be relieved by smoking
marijuana, such as pain or AIDS wasting."
St. Pierre criticized that assertion. "It is nothing less than an act of political
cowardliness for the IOM to admit that inhaled marijuana benefits some patients, while at
the same time recommending to those patients that their only alternative is to
suffer," he said. "Clearly, the time has come for this Administration to amend
federal law to allow seriously ill patients immediate legal access to medical
marijuana."
The IOM report did dismiss allegations that marijuana is
causally linked to the subsequent use of other illicit drugs, that the drug has a high
potential for addiction, or that it holds short-term immunosuppressive effects.
The researchers also concluded that "the adverse
effects of marijuana use are within the range tolerated for other medications.
END -
See
Drug Free America
Foundation Issues The First Prohibitionist Press Release
Using The IOM Report To Justify Arresting the Sick and Dying:
"Smoking Marijuana is Not Medicine."